http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/stewart_mandel/12/08/bcs-process/1.htmlIn the 13-year history of the BCS, has anyone ever had an easier path to the big game than Oregon? They have one victory against a Top 25 team (Stanford), they've defeated four bowl teams (five if USC is included) and their opponents' combined win/loss record is 54-69 (not including FCS Portland State). By the same token, has any team ever had a tougher path than Auburn? With South Carolina counting twice in each category, their résumé includes wins over six ranked teams, they defeated nine bowl teams and their opponents' record is 76-50 (not including FCS Chattanooga).
-- Thomas Coyne, Detroit
It's an excellent question, and one I can easily research thanks to the extensive archives kept by CollegeBCS.com's Jerry Palm -- the same man who uncovered the BCS' errant computer rankings this week. You're our hero, Jerry. Note that his strength-of-schedule records do not include FCS foes. For the other two criteria, I'm only counting ranked teams/bowl teams that title participants beat, not just played; I'm using final BCS standings to qualify teams as "ranked;" and I'm counting all bowl-eligible teams under "bowl" to account for the fact that there used to be fewer bowls.
Hardest Path to Title Game During BCS Era
Rank Team Record Ranked Opponents Bowl Opponents
1. 1998 Florida State 74-44 (.627) 6 7
2. 2000 Florida State 74-44 (.627) 4 7
3. 2010 Auburn 76-50 (.603) 6 9
4. 2006 Florida 81-54 (.600) 3 9
5. 1999 Florida State 65-44 (.596) 3 7
6. 2000 Oklahoma 70-50 (.583) 5 7
7. 2009 Alabama 75-54 (.581) 3 9
8. 2008 Oklahoma 79-56 (.585) 5 7
9. 2008 Florida 76-55 (.580) 2 9
10. 2001 Nebraska 66-48 (.579) 1 7
11. 2001 Miami 61-45 (.576) 4 7
12. 2005 Texas 65-48 (.575) 3 8
13. 2002 Miami 70-53 (.569) 5 8
14. 2005 USC 66-50 (.569) 3 6
15. 2004 Oklahoma 66-51 (.564) 3 6
16. 2007 LSU 76-59 (.563) 4 8
17. 2003 Oklahoma 78-62 (.557) 2 7
18. 2004 USC 65-53 (.551) 3 6
19. 2009 Texas 74-61 (.548) 2 8
20. 1998 Tennessee 63-52 (.548) 4 7
21. 2002 Ohio State 77-64 (.546) 3 8
22. 2006 Ohio State 66-59 (.528) 2 7
23. 2003 LSU 69-65 (.514) 3 5
24. 2007 Ohio State 60-60 (.500) 1 5
25. 1999 Va. Tech 50-51 (.495) 1 5
26. 2010 Oregon 54-69 (.439) 1 5
Did Oregon have the easiest path to the BCS title game? It does look that way. The Ducks' opponents' .439 winning percentage is by far the lowest of the 26 title game participants. Only three other teams played just one ranked team and/or five bowl-eligible teams, most recently 2007 Ohio State. Having said that, I think you'd have to go with 1999 Virginia Tech, which had similar numbers to Oregon's but played in Palm's eighth-ranked conference that year (the Big East), whereas this year's Pac-10 rates second.
Meanwhile, Auburn's path wasn't the toughest, but it came awfully close. I'd put it no lower than third and arguably second. Its chief competitors were the 1998 and 2000 Florida State teams. Bobby Bowden's nonconference schedules back then would make current teams cry. That '98 team faced 11-2 Texas A&M, 9-2 Florida, 8-3 Miami and 8-4 USC. That team did lose a game (to 7-4 NC State), but it also played only five home games compared with eight for Auburn.
For the record, the team that played the tougher schedule has gone 5-7 in title games so far.
Interesting. FSU lost a game going into the championship in both of those runs that supposedly topped ours,
and we played two more bowl eligible opponents, as well, as played two more ranked opponents than the 2000 squad.